Thisbook examines the dangers and the patterns of adaptation that emerge throughexposure to risk on a daily basis. By addressing the influence of environmental factors in Indian OceanWorld history, the collection reaches across the boundaries of the natural andsocial sciences, presenting case-studies that deal with a diverse range ofnatural hazards fire in Madagascar, drought in India, cyclones and typhoons inOman, Australia and the Philippines, climatic variability, storms and flood inVietnam and the Philippines, and volcanic eruptions, earthquakes and tsunamisin Indonesia. These chapters, written by leading international historians,respond to a growing need to understand the ways in which natural hazards shapesocial, economic and political development of the Indian Ocean World, a regionof the globe that is highly susceptible to the impacts of seismic activity,extreme weather, and climate change.
.1. Revisiting Southeast Asian history with geology: some demographic consequences of a dangerous environment
Anthony Reid.
.- 2. The sea becomes mulberry fields and mulberry fields become the sea: dikes in the eastern Red River delta, c.200 BCE to the Twenty-first century CE Tana Li.
.- 3. The most horrible of evils: Social responses to drought and famine in the Bombay Presidency, 1782-1857 George Adamson.
.- 4. Philippine Typhoons since the seventeenth century James Francis Warren.
.- 5. Bushfire in Madagascar: natural hazard, useful tool and change agent Christian Kull.
.- 6. Emperor T? ?cs Bad Weather: Interpreting Natural Disasters in Vietnam, 1847-1883 Kathryn Dyt.
.- 7. Storm over San Isidro: Repeated dilS6